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submitted 6 days ago by ricesoup@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

I may have to work for a childish manager: he is older than me, which should mean he is more mature than me but he acts like a teenager, somebody I would never befriend out of the workplace. I don't know if he is simply this childish or if this is a facade he's been told to maintain.

I like to use downtime to learn, because my field is huge and there is so much stuff I barely understand, because learning opens doors to better jobs and because almost half of my coworkers bore me, use every excuse to smoke and if I read at least I don't have to talk to them.

I don't like wasting my time.

I worked for this manager, in the past: he had the guts to tell me I have to talk to him, as if I don't give him the attention he craves for I'm not good enough for him. I told him I am all to talk about the job, the science behind it (science I barely understand), about the devices we use, not about his life, not about what he did on his weekend, not about his problems with his wife.

He didn't say anything and to this day I don't know if I pissed him. I neither understand why doing your job is not enough. I'm there for a paycheck and to learn.

Working for this person is a terrible idea, right?

One of my biggest pet peeves is being forced to befriend people I don't feel attached to. It feels fake and walking on eggshells, like trying to guess what the needy person wants to hear, like he was a child. Why can't you say hi and get things done?

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[-] BlindFrog@lemmy.world 2 points 6 days ago

Social cohesion is one of the things workplaces tend to look for.

Preach it. I'm learning pretty often how connecting even a little with coworkers makes it toooons easier to cooperate and hold respect for each other during difficult situations.

"Good Morning"s and "How was your Weekend"s in the breathers between tasks go a long way @.@

this post was submitted on 23 May 2026
34 points (100.0% liked)

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